Tag Archive: Vic Chesnutt


AN EMPTY CHAIR

A hospital in Athens, Georgia filed a lawsuit  against a singer-songwriter whose disability made high hospital bills a fact of life – and now of death.

Vic Chesnutt, took an overdose of muscle relaxants, apparently deliberately, and died on Christmas day,  He was 45.

The health authority’s actions may not have been the only cause of his suicide but it contributed unnecessarily to making his life a constant battle. In any civilised nation, a person paralysed has the right to expect financial assistance to pay for basic treatment.

This year, Vic  made two brilliant albums  – At The Cut (a second collaboration with guys from A Silver Mt Zion among others) and a more paired down solo work Skitter On Take-Off.  Like all his records over the past two decades they contain songs of stark honesty, rich humanity  and black humour, proving that his death was most certainly not due to any loss of his creative faculties.

In the lyrics to ‘Myrtle’  in 1996, he wrote “I’m not an optimist – I’m not a realist – I might be a sub-realist but I can’t substantiate “.

He will be greatly missed.

James Victor “Vic” Chesnutt (November 12, 1964 – December 25, 2009).

Listen to one of his final interviews at NPR.

VIC CHESNUTT

As a long time admirer of Vic Chesnutt, I was pleased to finally get the chance to see the man himself  at the Bronson Club near Ravenna.

Chesnutt was paralysed from the waist down by a car accident at 18 and his early albums were stark Lo-Fi works documenting a man on the edge of despair who wasn’t long for this world.  One album from 1996 was even ominously entitled ‘About To Choke’. Continue reading